Saturday, December 12, 2009
Wacom Tablet review.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Begging.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Flipped out.
The Liquify tool
- Makes selected areas bigger/smaller in proportion
- Moves selected areas out/in/up/down/diagnol
- Allows you to mask off areas you dont want the tool to effect
- Used the bloat tool on her breasts (several clicks)
- Forward warped her hips out giving her that ghetto booty feel
- Adjusted brightness/contrast
- Used the smudge tool to erase her swimsuit straps
- used lasso tool to select her swimsuit then adjusted its color balance to a different color.
- Used topaz adjust filter to sharpen and make the image pop.


Perfect Skin tones In photoshop
- The easiest way to remove them is the Cloning Stamp. Click on the tool’s icon, hold the Alt key or option for mac and click on a skin area near the spot you want to remove. Let the Alt (option) key go and now click on the spot. It’ll be covered by the skin area you just picked . I suggest using a brush size similar to the size of the spot you want to remove, and also lowering the opacity value to 60% or so to get more realistic results.
- reflections
Close-ups sometimes show light reflections, especially on the forehead and nose. Removing them is as easy as removing spots: grab the Cloning Stamp and work the same as for step 1, making sure that this time the brushes mode is set to “Darken” instead of normal. - Smoothing the skin
After removing blotches and reflections, it’s time for smoothing . Press Ctrl+J to duplicate the background layer and with the new layer active, go to Filter > Noise > Median. After thar reduce the layer’s opacity to around 50%. This will blur the image a good bit and make the skin look even smoother. The last thing
The Median filter does a good job on skin but blurs out important subjects such as the eyes and hair that we want to be sharp so the image doesnt look cartoony. Add a layer mask to the background layer copy and with a black brush, start painting all over the areas you want to sharpen again.Or...Merge all visible layers and then use the history brush tool.See Its really not that bad...it just takes some time and dedication. The more you do it the better you'll get at it. It takes some experimentation as well..not all pictures are the same...for some you may spend minutes, others hours. Just stick with it....heres my before and after of Devon Aoki with light work to knock down some of her freckles and shine. Please View Full Size
BeforeAfter
Friday, November 13, 2009
The Healing brush tool
- Remove blemishes
- Remove clothes
- Remove Wrinkles
- Even Skintone
- MILLIONS OF POSSIBILITIES!!!

Megan Fox Head swap
The Art History Brush tool



On the beach.

Heres a pic I did a while back. I just found a Standard beach picture...and then found a hot babe.. who was not to mention completely naked...but for some unfound reason I shopped a black leather bikini on her. So all together I used three images to make this one. This image took me about oh...an hour or so to complete and still looks pretty good, despite the needed time to make minor adjustments. Here are my steps.
- Find relevant pictures
- Extract bikini and place it on model
- extract model and place her in beach photo
- adjust contrast/brightness of model, mess with color balance
- create a new duplicate layer for her shadow...went to layer effects, blending options and gave her shadow layer a inner shadow and filled its opacity to 100% and messed with the angles until the entire layer was dark. Then turned layer opacity to about 30%.
- Tweaked the angle of the shadow layer....Combined layers and saved.
Topaz Adjust




Content Aware Scaling
Content-aware scaling According to ADOBE.Com
Resize images and protect content
Content-Aware Scale resizes an image without changing important visual content such as people, buildings, animals, and so forth. While normal scaling affects all pixels uniformly when resizing an image, content-aware scaling mostly affects pixels in areas that don’t have important visual content. Content-Aware Scale lets you upscale or downscale images to improve a composition, fit a layout, or change the orientation. If you want to use some normal scaling when resizing your image, there is an option for specifying a ratio of content-aware scaling to normal scaling.
If you want to preserve specific areas when scaling an image, Content-Aware Scale lets you use an alpha channel to protect content during resizing.

- A.
- Original image
- B.
- Scaled narrower
- C.
- Scaled narrower, using content-aware scaling
For a video on content-aware scaling, see www.adobe.com/go/lrvid4120_ps. (Discussion of this feature begins at the four-minute mark.)
Preserve visual content when scaling images
- (Optional) Choose Select > All if you’re scaling a Background layer.
- Choose Edit > Content-Aware Scale.
- Specify any of the following in the options bar:
- Reference Point Location
- Click a square on the reference point locator
to specify the fixed point around which the image is scaled. By default this point is at the center of the image.
- Use Relative Positioning For Reference Point
- Click the button to specify the new position of the reference point in relation to its current position.
- Reference Point Position
- Positions the reference point at the specific location. Enter X-axis and Y-axis pixel dimensions.
- Scaling Percentage
- Specifies the image scaling as a percentage of the original size. Enter a percentage for the width (W) and height (H). If desired, click Maintain Aspect Ratio
.
- Amount
- Specifies the ratio of content-aware scaling to normal scaling. Specify a percentage for content-aware scaling by typing in the text box or clicking the arrow and moving the slider.
- Protect
- Chooses an alpha channel that specifies an area to protect.
- Protect Skin Tones
- Attempts to preserve regions that contain skin-tones.
- Reference Point Location
- Drag a handle on the bounding box to scale the image. Press Shift as you drag a corner handle to scale proportionately. When positioned over a handle, the pointer becomes a double arrow.
- Click either Cancel Transform
or Commit Transform
.
Specify content to protect when scaling
- Make a selection around the content you want to protect and then, in the Channels panel, click Save Selection As Channel
.
- (Optional) Choose Select > All if you’re scaling a Background layer.
- Choose Edit > Content-Aware Scale.
- In the options bar, choose the alpha channel you created.
- Drag a handle on the bounding border to scale the image.


The smudge tool
- Getting rid of blemishes
- Making the image more cartoony
- blending harsh lines
- distorting the image altogether

Swapping Faces. (Extract tool)
- On pic B (face pic) Extract the face you want by going to filter and then extract. After you have circled the face with the green pen..and filled it with blue you can now click finish or done. ***Its okay to have a little extra in this pic..you can erase some of it later.
- After you extract the face it will save it as a new layer...drag that layer into the body picture and you will have to then resize it and place it over the existing face.
- After resizing and any warping/transforming that needs to be done, take the eraser tool and erase any extra from the face layer.
- Your face now may be a couple shades too dark or a bit too much contrast so go to image>adjustments> Brightness/contrast and tweak the levers until you get what you want.
- If step 4 left you still unhappy you can mess with the color balance too until you get what you want.
- After youve made all your last minute mods and tweaks...you can merge all visible layers and your pic is complete.

